Journal of Sacred Work

Caregivers have superpowers! Radical Loving Care illuminates the divine truth that caregiving is not just a job. It is Sacred Work.

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I’d rather learn from one bird how to sing
than teach ten thousand stars how not to dance

-ee cummings

Chip_at_two_2
   I was lying still-wet on the floor of a purple bathtub as my mother twisted the washcloth raining a final stream of warmth upon me, the coda to my night’s bath. I was less than three. It’s my earliest memory & I got to share it with her again in one of our regular Saturday chats. She chuckled more at my remembrance than at hers. And we laughed together once more when I recalled a ritual in which I lay in beds as she fluttered a fresh top sheet down upon me, a cloud landing in a meadow.
   From where do we learn love? How is it taught to us?…

   Nearing ninety-five, mother lives alone on the fourth floor of an
assisted-living condominium that overlooks a duck pond. "I miss my
chicakedees and cardinals," she often tells me, a little confused at
the absecence of birds she fed for seventy years when she lived in a
house, "but I still have my music."
   I always think of my mother not as the person who taught me how to sing, but as the one who helped me appreciate the voice of music. I am one of her four children and she taught each of us what was most important – how
to love. And she did this not with instruction but with her presence.
   I often ask caregivers who taught them love. They offer beautiful answers. But what touches me most is the look on their faces as they describe their teacher. "It was my late grandmother," someone will say. And as the words fall from their mouths, I can almost see their grandmother sitting behind them smiling.
   "It was the doctor who came to my house when I had Scarlet Fever," another will say. And I picture my own family doctor walking into my room with his magic bag, his kind eyes, his cold stethescope, his warm touch.
   We learn love not from those who explain the concept to us, but from those who make us feel loved. We learn love from those who accept and affirm us, perhaps when we are feeling judged and rejected by others.
   Whenever I see a caregiver leaning to help someone in need, I wonder about this legacy of love. Who awakened in them the seed of kindness? Who was the first to help them climb outside themselves to fill another’s emptiness?
   Lots of people spend lots of energy trying to crush our ability to dance. I am glad to have learned the song of love from a kind woman, to know the memory of water wrung from a wash cloth and the fluttering of fresh sheets at bedtime. These are ways Love tells us of her presence in this world.

-Erie Chapman

Today’s poem fragment – from Rilke – The Third Elegy:

Mother, you made him small, it was you who began him,
he was new to you, you bent over his new
eyes the friendly world, and shut out the hostile.
Oh, where are the years when you interposed
your slender figure between him and the seething chaos?
How much you hid from him: the room, nightly suspect,
you made harmless, out of your heart’s refuge
you mingled a more human space into the space of his night.
Not in the dark, but in your nearer presence,
you placed the night lamp, gleaming as in friendship…

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5 responses to “Learning Love”

  1. Carol Elkins, R.N. Avatar
    Carol Elkins, R.N.

    This is a lovely reflection and brings up lots of warm memories for me as well. Thank you.

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  2. liz Wessel RN MS, SJHS Home Health Network, Orange, CA Avatar
    liz Wessel RN MS, SJHS Home Health Network, Orange, CA

    Learning Love
    Camouflaged behind overgrown brush
    Dull, lifeless, almost forgotten
    Stowed tightly, safely contained
    A precious soul awaits love
    Learning Love
    Shadows slowly pass
    Into light of morning
    Warmed by cool breezes
    Touched by suns rays
    Breathing deeply, life
    Learning Love
    Awakens, trusting goes forward
    Joins love’s circle
    Graceful movements
    Heart sings, dances free
    Learning Love
    Tender, fragile, risks all
    Risks being crushed
    Love flowers, opens to sun
    Learning Love
    Opens fully to pain
    Of birth and death
    Feels deep joy
    Revels in creations beauty
    Feels deep pain
    Sheds oceans of tears
    Mourns love’s loss
    Learning Love
    Stays open to
    Love all
    Feel all
    Give all
    Gratitude for all
    Loves gifts
    Blessings to you Erie, may they rain down abundantly from the heavens and touch upon you as soft rose petals of gratitude for the many ways you invite and encourage caregivers to join in the dance of love.

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  3. Sonya Jones Avatar
    Sonya Jones

    Thank you Erie for evoking the gift of wonderful childhood memories. My grandmother taught me how to love and bestowed on me a legacy that allows me to open my heart and home to others in need of unconditonal love. Sometimes she taught tough-love that was laced with responsibilty, good citizenship and stewardship of time, talent and resources and I am so much better for it. I hope my children and grandchildren, neighbors and friends will have similar memories of me. (I have some work to do to that end though!)

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  4. Karen York Avatar
    Karen York

    My mother blanketed me with love and I am hopeful that I do the same for my own children. If you will endulge me, I would like to offer something I wrote to my three daughters (ages 13, 13 & 15) this past Thanksgiving. I am always so moved at the innocence of their beings while they are sleeping. Their fears and attitude have slipped away, and this is what I see/feel.
    A Mother’s Thanks
    As you lay blanketed in innocent slumber, I float to yesterdays’ slatted beds and footy pajamas. You are now the 3-year-old you, dewy soft, cherubic, free of worry, free of pain. Stroking your soft brown, my fingers twirl unmapped blonde curls. In that hidden space on the back of your neck, the place I kiss to test for fever, sweet infancy still rests there in your pink. Your unmistakable fragrance reminds me that you are the astonishing creation of the best of me and the best of him. I mourn those yesterdays when you clattered and chattered your way across the hard wood. I mourn the tomorrows, when with your mother’s strong jaw you turn away toward your own bright hope. But tonight while you lay sleeping, I kiss with gratitude the eternal essence of you who gave me life and forever will be my reason for existence.

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  5. Barbara Quinn Avatar
    Barbara Quinn

    Erie,
    You have brought tears to my eyes and warmth to my heart. Thanks for taking me down memory lane.

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